Diamonds and Clubs A.Indd

Diamonds and Clubs A.Indd

ZIMBABWE DIAMONDS AND CLUBS The Militarized Control of Diamonds and Power in Zimbabwe PartnershiP africa canada June 2010 Cahora Bassa 27 28 Lusaka 29 30 31 32 33 34 ° ° ° Luangw° a Zumbo ° ° Dam ° ° Kafue bezi Z Kafue am Kanyemba Cahora am ZIMBABWE Z b Mazabuka Albufeira de Bassa è Namwala z Cahora Bassa e 16° Chirundu 16° Monze Makuti i Tete n MOZAMBIQUE a Kariba y Muzarabani ZAMBIA n Kariba Dam u H MASHONALAND LakeKariba Centenary Mount Darwin Mulobezi Choma Karoi Mhangura Changara S e a o n CENTRAL z Z Siyakobvu y a 17 a a MASHONALAND 17 ° M ° m Kalomo ti Zave Bindura b WEST Kildonan Shamva e Masuku z Siabuwa Mutoko i Sesheke Maamba Glendale Chinhoyi ST A Kazungula Binga E Lake Harare D NAMIBIA Livingstone Manyame N be Kasane ro A ho Victoria ve L 18 i C M L. Chi 18 °nt Falls Victoria Falls Gokwe u Chitungwiza A Marondera Catandica ° ya ny N Nyanga in Matetsi a Chegutu L Kachikau ti O G Kamativi w Sengwa H a Kadoma S Hwange yi Dahlia Rusape Pandamatenga (Gwayi River) A Hwedza Dete M Nyazura i Sh z anga d ni S O a Lupane Kwekwe v Manica Redcliff Chivhu e 19° MIDLANDS Mutare 19° MATABELELAND Mvuma Chimoio MANICALAND Lago R Eastnor Gweru Chicamba io NORTH R Hot Springs evu G Inyati Shurugwi M è BO TSWAN A w u Gutu a t i y R r i i Chimanimani u k Nata n w Glenclova d i Dombé Bulawayo e 20 Birchenough i 20 ° Masvingo Chipinge z ° Esigodini Lake Bridge u Nata Zvishavane B Mutirikwi Rio e Plumtree v a Espungabera S National capital Mosetse MASVINGO Provincial capital Makgadikgadi Pan Antelope Gwanda Town, village Mine Nandi Mill 21° Triangle Major airport S h West Nicholson Chiredzi Francistown a International boundary s R h Rutenga u e MATABELELAND Mbizi n Provincial boundary U d m e E z Makado U ZIMBABWE Main road SOUTH in Q g I w M B a a Secondary road n n M i Thuli i s A Railroad i Z 22 O ° Selebi-Pikwe Beitbridge M 22° 0 50 100 150 km mpopo Malvernia Messina Li o The boundaries and names shown and the designations op 0 50 100 mi Limp used on this map do not imply official endorsement or S O U T H AFRICA acceptance by the United Nations. 26° 27° 28° 29° 30° 31° Map No. 4210 Rev. 1 UNITED NATIONS Department of Peacekeeping Operations January 2004 Cartographic Section DIAMONDS AND CLUBS About this Report Partnership Africa Canada The Militarized Control of is very grateful for the Diamonds and Power in Zimbabwe Partnership Africa Canada has been a leader in support for its research the campaign against conflict diamonds since programme provided by Series Editors: 1999. It is an active member of the Kimberley Irish Aid, Foreign Affairs Alan Martin and Bernard Taylor Process and its working groups. This report and and International Trade others are available on line at www.pacweb.org. Canada, the International Managing Editor: Development Research Josée Létourneau The report was completed in June 2010. We are Centre and others. aware that the political situation in Zimbabwe Design: is fragile and that it will evolve. This is unlikely Marie-Joanne Brissette to change the basic premise, conclusions and Partnership Africa Canada recommendations in the report. 331 Cooper Street ISBN: 1-897320-19-1 Suite 600 Partnership Africa Canada would like to thank Ottawa, Ontario © Partnership Africa Canada the many individuals in Europe, North America K2P 0G5 June 2010 and especially in Southern Africa who have Canada helped make the report possible. For obvious For permission to reproduce reasons they cannot be named, but their Tel: +1-613-237-6768 or translate all or parts of this assistance is very much appreciated. Fax: +1-613-237-6530 publication, please contact [email protected] Partnership Africa Canada www.pacweb.org DIAMONDS AND CLUBS: The Militarized Control of Diamonds and Power in Zimbabwe “Every single rich alluvial diamond deposit ever found in Africa has ended in war. The Anglo-Boer war in South Africa 100 years ago, the defence of Namibia by the apartheid regime, Angola, DRC, Sierra Leone, Liberia - it is a frightening prospect. There have been no exceptions.” – ACR CEO Andrew Cranswick1 “The country is starving, civil servants are going on strike, hospitals have no medicine, agriculture have no chemicals and schools have no books. We cannot continue to be playing around like you guys are doing…Are our diamonds meant to benefit certain individuals or it is intended to benefit the nation?” – Edward Chindori-Chininga, Chair, Mines and Energy Committee to a government witness.2 “Democracy is never mob-rule. It is and should remain disciplined rule requiring compliance with the law and social rules. Our independence must thus not be construed as an instrument vesting individuals or groups with the right to harass and intimidate others into acting against their will.” – President Robert Mugabe, address to the nation on the eve of Independence, April 17, 1980 1 “Diamond Saga: Sleaze, corruption and perversion of course of justice,” Zimbabwe Independent, March 12, 2010 2 Transcript, Parliamentary Committee on Mines and Energy, Harare, February 8, 2010. 1 DIAMONDS AND CLUBS: Zimbabwe and the Kimberley Process The Militarized Control of Diamonds and Power The story of Zimbabwe’s contested diamond fields is about many things: smuggling and frontier hucksterism; a scramble fuelled by raw economic desperation and unfathomable in Zimbabwe greed; and, of course, heart-wrenching cases of government-sponsored repression and human rights violations. It is also about political intrigue, ambition and a complete disregard for decency or the rule of law. But it is not just another black eye for a once great nation alone. It is also a story of how the Kimberley Process — the international initiative created to ensure that the trade in diamonds does not fund violence and civil war — has lost its way. Zimbabwe is not the only country failing to meet some or all of the basic requirements asked of diamond producing nations by the Kimberley Process. A lack of political will and weak internal controls in the Democratic Republic of Congo, for example, allows for a steady flow of illegal diamonds onto the international market. But Zimbabwe sets itself apart from the others because of the government’s brazen defiance of universally agreed principles of humanity and good governance expected of adherents to the Kimberley Process.3 As such Zimbabwe poses a serious crisis of credibility for the KP, whose impotence in the face of thuggery and illegality in Zimbabwe underscores a worrisome inability or unwillingness to enforce either the letter, or the spirit, of its founding mandate. This report makes several other contentions. The first is that what is occurring in the two contested diamond areas — Marange in the eastern province of Manicaland and River Ranch in the south — cannot be seen in isolation. They are inextricably linked to the same pursuit of political power, and the same defiance of KP protocols. Almost four years after the military took Another is that Zimbabwe’s diamonds are “blood diamonds”. This is a charge that Zimbabwe not surprisingly refutes, citing the KP’s own definition that the term applies control of Marange not only to “rough diamonds used by rebel movements to finance wars against legitimate one cent has entered governments”4. But that interpretation fails to recognize the current political realities the national treasury. of Zimbabwe, or consider how, and to what ends, political elites within ZANU-PF are using diamonds to both jockey for power in a post-Mugabe era and destabilize the Government of National Unity, created in February 2009 with the inclusion of the Movement of Democratic Change (MDC)5. These political elites are intimately tied to Zimbabwe’s military establishment, the Joint Operation Command, and as such constitute a “rebel movement” opposed to the democratic governance of Zimbabwe. The obsessive control of the country’s diamond resources by this small renegade group threatens the viability of the Government of National Unity (GNU) in other significant ways. Almost four years after the military took control of Marange not one cent has 3 There are numerous examples of ZANU officials openly defying the Kimberley Process. See for example, Mines Minister Obert Mpofu: “We are going to benefit from our diamonds whether with the KP or not.” (AFP, April 27, 2010) 4 See for example, “Zimbabwe Denies Kimberley Process Violations”, AFP, July 1, 2009; http://www.israelidiamond.co.il/ english/NEWS.aspx?boneID=918&objID=5440 5 In 2005 the MDC split into two parties over internal disputes. The larger faction, MDC-Tsvangirai (MDC-T), is led by Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and continues to be the main opposition party. The smaller faction, MDC-Mutambara (MDC-M), is led by Arthur Mutambara, who serves as Deputy Prime Minister. Throughout this report, however, we refer to the MDC in the singular. 2 entered the national treasury6. This has three consequences: it starves the national treasury of any benefit that could steer Zimbabwe back from economic ruin, it thwarts DIAMONDS AND CLUBS: efforts to re-legitimize public institutions and it leads to an overall lack of confidence The Militarized Control of in the Government of National Unity in which millions of Zimbabweans have put their Diamonds and Power trust to tangibly improve their lives. in Zimbabwe By not explicitly acknowledging these threats to Zimbabwe’s political stability, the ability of the KP and key foreign actors to appropriately respond to this crisis is severely In a moment of rare compromised.

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